Disguise tv: Designer Secret: How to Hide a TV in Plain Sight!

Designer Secret: How to Hide a TV in Plain Sight!

Learn creative and stylish ways to disguise your TV. Don’t let that big black box detract from your interior design. Instead, hide your TV in plain sight!

Whether you’re flipping through the glossy pages of home magazines or browsing gorgeous rooms on Instagram, there’s one thing you’ll almost never see: a television.

Despite modern advances with sleeker models, hidden buttons, and thinner frames, flat screen TVs are still an eyesore. And furniture is often oriented to face the TV, so everyone is always looking at it even if it’s not on. And let’s be honest, there’s nothing about a shiny black rectangle that has someone say, “Oh, that’s pretty!”

Of course, that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t have a TV! It just means that you might want to minimize its appearance or hide it altogether.

TV mirror via Sims Hilditch

I’ve gathered up some of the best, most creative, ideas for hiding a TV to give you some inspiration for your own home. You can use the Table of Contents below to help you navigate.

How to Hide a TV in Plain Sight

It’s possible to blend a TV right into a room’s decor so that it doesn’t just look like a big black box hanging on a wall or sitting on a console. So I’ve gathered up some stylish ways to hide a TV! From artwork, to cabinets, mirrors, and even special screens, these are some of the best ways to hide a TV in your home.

So if a giant black rectangle isn’t quite the focal point you had in mind for your room, here are several ways that you can cover up your TV!

Sliding doors with art reveal the TV behind! via Digs Digs

Invest in a Smart TV

A smart TV is one that has an integrated internet connection. One of the benefits is that you can then add digital art to your TV! When not in use, you can display art on the screen. Or you can even display a family photo or a slideshow of photos.

The Samsung Frame TV is one option that has this feature, but other TVs also have an art option. The benefit to the Frame TV, though, is that it’s super thin and sits flat on the wall, truly mimicking a piece of art.

The Frame TV comes with a subscription to access Samsung’s art database, but you can also buy individual images that are sized and ready-to-use on Etsy. Or you can just download my curated selections of FREE Fall and Winter TV art.

To make your Frame TV look even more like a framed picture, you can even get a decorative frame like I did for my TV! I purchased this from Deco TV Frames.

Cover Your TV with Art

When the TV is off, you can cover it with art!  There are a couple of ways that this can be done, including a fixed piece of art that lifts up as a sliding panel, as shown below.

You can also purchase a flat canvas that retracts when the TV is in use. It’s basically a motorized roller shade for a TV.

via JTM Interiors

You can also create a folding screen with art on the front that you simply fold back when the TV is in use. This bi-fold art really gives you the best of both worlds!

via House Beautiful

Conceal it Behind a Mirror

Decorating with mirrors is one way to make a small room look bigger. So a mirror combined with a TV is a win-win!

One way is to conceal a TV is behind two-way mirror. This way, the TV will only show through the mirror when it’s in use. When not in use, you just see a mirror.

A downside to using a two-way mirror, though, is that when the TV is off, the mirror isn’t quite as reflective as a traditional mirror.  And when the TV is on, it is “behind” the glass so perhaps doesn’t have quite as clear of a picture.  The Media Mirror, developed by Media Décor, is an adapted version of the two-way mirror that aims to resolve both of these issues.

via Seuravia Reflectel

You can also use folding panels with mirrored fronts you simply open when you want to watch TV.

via House Beautiful

Install a TV Lift

TVs are popping up everywhere, literally!  You can hide your TV in your kitchen counter, buy TV cabinets from which the TV lifts up when in use or you can even get a lift that comes out from underneath your bed.

Photo by TV Lift Cabinet by Cabinet Tronix – Discover living room design ideas

If your TV is recessed into the wall a bit, decorative doors might be a good option, although you’ll need to ensure that you have enough clearance on either side of your TV such that the doors can open easily.  If it’s not recessed, you can still add doors but you’ll first need to frame them so that the frame can go around the TV.

via House Beautifulvia Lewin Wertheimer

Below, a simple system of barn doors opens to reveal the TV behind!

via 12th Ave Homes, LLC

Paint the Wall Dark

How can you make a black screen essentially disappear? By painting the wall behind it a dark shade, of course! While decorating with black can be dramatic and timeless, navy blue is a great option too. The dark wall will help the TV screen fade away!

via Future PLC / James French

Hide it in a Cabinet

One of the benefits to hiding your TV in a cabinet is that you get some extra storage out of it and it’s an easy place to hide the cords, cables and components that go along with a TV.

via Digs Digs

Flip Out from the Ceiling

No wall space to hang a TV?  No problem!  You can have it flip down from the ceiling!

via Dijeau Poage Construction

Surround it with Decor

This might be the easiest and least expensive solution when working with an existing TV. You can simply surround it with other decor so that the TV isn’t the standalone item on the wall!

A gallery wall is one option, where you essentially treat your TV like a black picture. For this reason, it’s best to incorporate a bit of black in your other wall decor for a cohesive feel.

via Digs Digs

If your TV is in a shelving unit, you can use decor to distract from the TV! The built-in storage of this entertainment center gives lots of options to display pieces that will keep your eye moving instead of focusing on the TV.

via HUX London

Try a Pull-Down Map

We’re going old-school with this one! It’s a relatively simple design but works perfectly!

Details at Home Love Stories

Buy a TV Cover

If you have a wall-mounted television and you don’t have space for a cabinet, there are wall-mount cabinets that you can purchase to decoratively hide your TV! You could even use these above a fireplace!

Ballard Designs sells two beautiful options.

Shop Ballard DesignsShop Ballard Designs

You can also purchase relatively inexpensive fabric dust covers on Amazon that have artwork printed on them!

Shop Amazon

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14 Ways to Stylishly Hide a TV in Plain Sight

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“Televisions are a necessary evil for interior designers,” says Christina Valencia, one half of the husband-and-wife studio Colossus Mfg. Most of their clients want to have one in their living space, but the practical place for it always seems to be right in the middle of the room. The result? When you’re not streaming or hosting Super Bowl Sunday, you’re left looking at a big black box. No matter how cool your media console or how chic your sectional, no amount of style can completely turn your head from the eyesore. Fortunately, this all-too-common dilemma has forced designers to get creative with temporarily disguising the tricky tech when it’s powered off, and surprisingly most of their solutions are easy to DIY. Here’s how to hide your TV, 14 different ways.

Layer Artwork Over a Samsung Frame TV

Brigette Muller, the creative behind the home decor account @hummusbird, openly admits that she doesn’t watch a lot of TV, so mounting her Frame in an unusual spot (it’s that one directly underneath the bookshelf!) seemed like a suitable enough position, especially when she is lying horizontal on her sofa. To really disguise it, though, she opted for an elaborate gold border (you can buy a similar-looking one on Amazon). That way, when she sets the screen saver to an oil painting and leans actual similar works against it, her living room feels more like an artist’s studio than it does a place for bingeing Succession.

Pull Up the Big Screen

Lone Fox Home creator Drew Scott connected the drawers in the center of this vintage hutch to form a cubby that can hold a roll-up screen. When movie night comes around, Scott can simply draw it up and attach it to a hook he placed on the top.


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 Stash It Behind Slatted Wood

The thought process that led to this stained white oak cabinet, designed by Hyphen and Co. and the project’s lead designer, Eliza McNabb, was twofold: When hosting, guests are constantly walking through the den to get to the kitchen and main hallway, so it allows the space to feel more elevated when it’s not turned on. The homeowners also use the house during the summer months, when they spend much of their time outside, so having the option to close the unit keeps the focus on nature and spending time together. 

Artfully, Open Sesame

Pulp Design Studios made a clever hideaway for a client’s rarely used television by setting the screen into the wall and adding “doors” on either side. When closed, all guests see are six works of art in matching frames.

Embrace Your Inner Van Gogh

Valencia and her husband, Kele Dobrinski, took a similar approach by putting the TV in Dobrinski’s parents’ home in a cabinet. Rather than hunting down prints at an antiques shop, though, they painted an abstract landscape onto the facade. 

Shroud It With Scrap Textiles

Designer Alex Boudreau happens to have a “ridiculous collection” of 1-yard fabric samples, so when she feels like hiding her eye-level, wall-mounted TV, she just throws her favorite one of the month over it. 


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Put an Old Rug to Use

Often the only logical place to situate the tech is directly over the fireplace—a no-no in the design world, as it takes away from the gathering and conversing that a roaring fire encourages. That’s why Los Angeles–based creative director, stylist, and photographer Kristin Guy was determined to mask hers with a five-minute DIY that calls for a flat-weave rug, a dowel, and a couple of sturdy hooks.  

Lean It on an Easel

New York designer Crystal Sinclair decided to leave her client’s Frame TV out in the open in her Brooklyn loft—but by positioning it on an antique easel instead of a traditional media console, it takes on the role of art rather than atrocity. Wright will fool people into thinking it’s a real painting by throwing on a screen saver, as is intended with the Samsung product. 

Mix the Frame TV Into a Gallery Wall

Another smart way to make the most of the Frame TV: Work it into a gallery wall like interior stylist Scott Horne did in his L.A. living room. The original wide wall paneling (now painted in Benjamin Moore’s White Dove) adds a layer of dimension that further helps the 3D box blend into the background. 

Shield It With a Drop Cloth, Two Ways

DIYer and blogger Emily Brownell took a drop cloth outside, primed it, and painted abstract shapes on the canvas using leftover sample jars and oil pastels she had lying around her house. The large-scale tapestry now hangs from a dowel that’s mounted to the ceiling in her garage-turned-den. When it’s movie night, all the family has to do is lift the fabric and push it behind the TV.


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Seeking Lavender Lane blogger Deb Foglia not only needed to hide her screen but the unsightly cable box and cords attached to it. So after mounting it all on the only blank wall in her space, she screwed a curtain rod into the ceiling, popped on two rings, and finished off the disguise with a 9-by-12-foot drop cloth. 

Take a Moment to Reflect

Things get even trickier when you’re trying to obscure a television in a room where you usually don’t expect to see one. Following her client’s request for a secret screen in the dining room, designer Maggie Burns opted for a Reflectel, a custom framed TV that, when turned off, is concealed by mirror glass. 

Go Big When You Go Home

If a discreet home theater is what you’re after, take a cue from Emily Henderson and install a projector with a simple white cartridge (hers is mounted on the ceiling above her sofa) and a pull-down screen (located above the window). All the cords are hidden behind the shades or within white cord covers that her installer snaked down the middle of the windows. 

Think: What Would James Bond Do?

After realizing this apartment only had one wall available for artwork, designer Charlotte Sylvain of Studio Fauve decided to position the TV in the middle of the room. The custom floating dining banquette–meets–media console comes with a remote-controlled lift that conceals (or reveals) the flat screen at the touch of a button. 


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7 ideas and 35 examples – Roomble.com

2021-09-06T02:45:00+00:00
2021-09-06T02:57:17+00:00
Where to hide the TV: 7 ideas and 35 examples
2021-09-06T02:45:00+00:00
The “Hot Seven” of ingenious solutions that allow you to put your TV out of sight, but at the same time provide quick and convenient access to it if necessary
Where to hide the TV: 7 ideas and 35 examples

The “hot seven” of ingenious solutions to put the TV out of sight, but at the same time provide quick and convenient access to it if necessary

What to do if you are not ready to give up the TV, but do not want to see it as an element of the interior ? There is a solution: hide! The modern market offers many solutions and technologies that allow you to remove the TV from the visibility zone. However, not all of them are practical, and it is important not only to securely hide the unit, but also to be able to access it as conveniently and quickly as possible when needed.

Where and how to place the TV in the house: a guide and tips from the pros

What to watch this week #6: movies that designers love

One of the easiest ways to hide a TV is to cover it with a picture. To facilitate the process of access to the unit, a special mechanism is installed above it, lowering or raising the picture. As a rule, companies involved in the production of such paintings offer to choose an image from the catalog or use their own. In most cases, mounting a picture with a mechanism does not require any special preparation; it is quite possible to do it yourself.

There are several other technical solutions to the same problem: the picture is mounted on special rails and moved away manually or with the help of a remote control; the TV is installed in a special frame and closed, if necessary, with a retractable canvas; the picture is mounted on lifting mechanisms and rises in the process of using the TV for its intended purpose.

Sliding panels are the perfect solution for those who are wondering how to hide the TV on the wall. At the same time, such panels can either almost completely merge with the wall, or, on the contrary, become not only a disguise for the receiver, but also a bright accent in the interior.

Mirror TV is a fairly common solution, most often used in bathrooms. In the off state, such a mirror looks the most ordinary way, reliably hiding its additional function from the eyes.

Our opinion:

— Of course, a mirror-TV can hardly be considered as the main TV receiver: the picture quality, screen size and anti-reflective properties of such models leave much to be desired. However, as an additional option for those areas of the apartment where it is difficult to place a full-fledged TV (for the bathroom, hallway or kitchen), this solution is very suitable.

Modern furniture manufacturers are well aware of the needs of customers – and offer their own original options for how to hide the TV. So, you can see on sale cabinets with a TV receiver retractable upwards (relevant for bedrooms). For living rooms, there are special walls with a niche for a TV, which can be closed with doors or a panel. Moreover, if desired, you can purchase wardrobes, beds and even bathtubs with built-in TVs.

The television can, in the truest sense of the word, be securely hidden in the wall using a rotating mechanism. It is relevant only for thick walls, since the niche for such a solution should be quite deep.

Is it worth installing a TV in the bathroom: an architect’s opinion and 10 inspirational ideas

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If you are looking for and can’t find the answer to the question of how to hide the TV on the wall, perhaps your option is to disguise the TV receiver on the ceiling. There are companies that specialize in exactly this way to hide the TV: it hides in a ventilation shaft, in a false ceiling, or in a specially designed box.

Sounds fantastic, but if you want, you can actually hide or just place the TV wherever you want. There are companies that lay special “rails” throughout the apartment, along which the TV can move in all directions, changing the angle of rotation of the screen. You can clean it in special niches or in a closet. And you can turn away to the wall by placing a print or picture on the back.

Our opinion:

– If you are wondering how to hide the TV, do not forget to think in advance how to hide the wires – sometimes this problem is very pressing. We offer three of the most common options.

1. Cable channel. You can paste over it with wallpaper or paint it in the color of the walls to make it less noticeable.

2. Strobes in the floor, wall, ceiling. Suitable only if you are sure that you will not change the location of the TV until the new repair.

3. Special furniture for TV with a well-thought-out system for arranging and fixing wires.

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Hiding the TV in the interior – saving the design

Often when designing an interior, you encounter a problem – where to put the TV so that it does not spoil all the beauty that we planned to create in the apartment. Or rather, in the living room and bedroom – the rooms where this black “family friend” is basically located. As soon as you look at this brilliant screen, which by no means wants to harmonize with blue walls or pink chairs, you want to cry so much. And if it is also large, this very screen? What to do? Of course, hide the TV in the interior and save the entire design of the room!

Here are just a few ideas for a stylish and harmonious “TV design” that will hide (and in some cases reveal) all sides of the dark screen as a decor in the interior.

TV in the interior as part of the decor

There are times when the TV does not need to be hidden at all, because it fits so well into the decor of the room. Suppose you have a completely authentic wall in your living room. So let the TV in the interior of this living room be one of the decor elements! And the plant next to it will help you imagine that you are watching your favorite series in some kind of winter garden, for example …

Hiding the screen behind photos or a painting

This idea is for those who like to do everything by hand. The TV in the interior (photo above) can be hidden behind a panel with photographs or behind a real picture. You just need to find a suitable panel, attach a large (or several small) paintings or 4-5 photographs placed in identical frames to it, attach it all to the wall on hinges or hinges – and that’s it! Homemade doors to hide the TV on the wall in the interior are ready.

Hiding in a closet or closet


The easiest way to “camouflage” a TV in a living room or bedroom interior is to hide it in a closet or closet.


This method is also good because you can choose a locker for any interior style. Be it classic styles or modern. Just imagine what a closet should be like that could hide your TV in an Art Deco interior, or, for example, vintage, or minimalism … And everything else, as they say, is a matter of technology.

In the bedroom, it will also be very easy to hide the TV in the interior. The photo shows how it can be easily and simply placed in the wardrobe on one of the shelves. True, handbags or shoes will have to make room. But it’s all nonsense. But the TV will not be visible and the color scheme of the interior will not be disturbed.

Hiding in bed

Now they sell such models of beds that have such a special hiding place. Oh, we knew you’d love this idea! None of your friends have such a bed, that’s for sure. In addition, none of them will guess where you hide the TV in the interior of the bedroom.

Replacement projector


No, the TV itself should not be thrown away. Just buy an additional projector and a screen that will cover your TV on the wall in the interior of the living room. Thus, you will kill two birds with one stone – increase the screen diagonal and save yourself from thinking about the imperfection of interior design.

Beauty TV


Yes, TVs can sometimes be works of art. Especially small models. You just need to search in stores and the Internet. Unusual models will save your design, and the TV in the interior of the living room will stop annoying you.

Hang a TV mirror

New technologies can do anything. And although now mirror TVs are still very rare, nevertheless, there is such an option to hide the TV on the wall in the interior. The screen is off – it is a simple mirror, but it is worth turning it on and … Op-la-la we watch a movie or news in the size we want.